Micron Joins the Big Leagues

A brutal price war triggered a wave of bankruptcies some five years ago, but not all the companies left standing came out stronger on the other side. Elpida was Japan's last great hope but filed for bankruptcy earlier this year. A bidding war (so much nicer than price wars!) erupted over the company's assets, and it looks like we have a winner.

Reuters and others report that according to anonymous sources, Micron Technology (Nasdaq: MU) walked away with the prize. The price tag reportedly grew from $1.5 billion to $2.75 billion, according to a Japan Times report, as Korean memory giant Hynix and a consortium of American and Chinese private equity firms pushed the envelope. Micron reportedly got the nod at least partly thanks to a willingness to keep Elpida's Japanese factories running.

Micron might be able to negotiate the final price tag even lower by throwing in other perks, but the battle has largely been fought and won.

So what's this "triopoly" I'm talking about? Well, Micron and Elpida together control about 28% of the market for DRAM chips, according to reports by IHS iSuppli. Samsung is No. 1 with a 33% share, and Hynix grabs 23% of all DRAM sales. That's 84% of the total market, leaving minor players like Toshiba, Nanya, and Winbond to fight over a scant 16% slice.

The situation is even more polarized in DRAM for mobile computing, where Samsung controls more than half of the market, and the proposed big three would own a stunning 98.9% of all sales. Importantly, Micron would buy its way into the booming Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) account -- Elpida landed a supply contract for iPhone and iPad memory in 2011, but it was too little, too late to stop the slide into bankruptcy.

Micron's shares could use a boost. The stock gained 40% between the new year and mid-March, then gave it all back. I'm on this roller coaster for the long haul, but if these dips and jumps scare you senseless, the Fool has found a no-brainer growth company worthy of being called "The Motley Fool's Top Stock for 2012." Click here to learn more, but hurry while the report is still totally free.

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